There's more to this first page than is immediately apparent to the eye. A
drop-down menu at the bottom right of the screen gives you access to a
variety of departments from the Mayor's Office to the Water Office. A
couple of the menu
items across the top part of the page -- resident services and business
services -- have subcategories that you can see when you pass your mouse
over them.

I recommend you check out the "How Do I" menu item, which fills you in on
doing everything from reporting a housing code violation to getting
frequently-asked questions from the department of water. On the left side
of the front page, you've got several more options, including checking
news releases and getting information on the Dirty Dozen ("blighted"
buildings slated for rehabilitation). You can also report pot holes, pay
traffic tickets, or download one of a couple-dozen forms.

HI -- Hawaii -- Honoluluhttp://www.co.honolulu.hi.us/
So I figured, if Alaska has a Web cam, surely Hawaii has a cam? And they
did, but it wasn't on the front page. In fact they have live cams with
streaming video showing a couple of beaches. I didn't watch for long lest
I become incredibly depressed at the weather outside my own window.

The front page of Honolulu is rather spare, containing only one menu on
the left that includes Kama'aina (local information and services),
information for kids, and information for visitors. Hold your mouse over
the menu items to get more information about them in the center of the
screen.

All the sub-pages are nicely done. The visitor's information page provides
a subject index about what to see (that's where I found the links to the
Web cams.) The City Government and Kama'aina also provide subject indexes,
as
does the business page. The Online Services page isn't huge but you can
pay your traffic tickets, submit your Vehicle Registration Renewal, or
fill out one of many forms at the online city hall.

IA -- Iowa -- Des Moines
http://www.ci.des-moines.ia.us/
Ah, back to the headlines on the right side of the page. But Iowa's a
little different. In addition to headlines, you'll also find hot topics
(including links to pay parking tickets and property taxes) as well as a
city meeting calendar and
archived video from previous city council meetings.

If you check out the menu on the left side of the page you'll find several
popup menus, including one for residents, one for visitors, and one for
business. Though they're not annotated they're handy pages of resources.

Also check out the links at the top of the page. The forms center provides
information on both interactive and PDF forms. The mapping center has
several different maps, including city zip codes, neighborhoods, and
street maps.
And the transaction center lets you pay your parking tickets and property
tax online, among other things. Nicely done!.

IL -- Illinois -- Springfieldhttp://www.springfield.il.us/
That's a very pretty capital in the background but unfortunately it makes
the page text a bit hard to read. I think I'll turn off the style sheet
and see if that helps. Ah, much better! Unfortunately the picture of
Lincoln disappeared too and now the menu items are oddly-spaced. But I can
read the page and that's important.

The middle part of the page includes a variety of headlines, including the
dedication of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, the City of
Springfield's 2002 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, and changing of
the city's ten wards. To get more into the site, you need to check the
menu items on
the left. Menu items include Elected Officials (pictures and links for
city officials -- page title, please!) The "Action Center" takes you to a
framed page with information and forms for several different online
departments.

The Employment button lists available job (with application forms) while
the city departments lists phone numbers and links for many different city
departments, while "What To Do" has a community calendar and schedule of
events. I found this site to have a lot of information, but it wasn't
friendly to my copy of Opera 6.x .

IN -- Indiana -- Indianapolishttp://www.indygov.org/
You gotta love a city site that headlines with "Mayor to take job as food
vendor at Sunday's sold-out Colts' game." News is in the middle of the
page. Features are on the left of the page and include a Media Violence
Resource Center,
the 2002 Election Results and a collection of available e-newsletters.

While these are interesting they're not what you'd usually expect from a
city site. Those kinds of links are available from the bottom middle of
the page. The eGov link is excellent and offers access to many online
services, including online surveys, online traffic ticket payment, online
tax payments, and volunteer opportunities.

The Community Center will take your address and tell you who your elected
officials are, as well as give information about city council meetings.
The Business section gives information about city permits and purchasing,
as well as RFQs. The Visitors page is more external links than direct
information, but the Kids page has some nice information (e-mail the
mayor!) Cleanly designed and nicely done.

The four items on the right are Business & Community Information (a link
list from animal control to weather), City Government Information (another
link list, from Accounting / Finance to Zoning, only Zoning is not
hyperlinked. The last linked item is "Streets / Water / Sewer / Refuse."),
Fun Stuff (events and sites to see, looks a bit like a visitors
information site), and Talk to Us, which offers a city department
phonebook in PDF format. There are some unexpected items here -- if you're
a citizen of Topeka you can request a mayoral proclamation via the Web
site.

Over on the left you'll find more focused items, including a search links,
an updates section (for, among other things, homeland security, street
closings, current projects, and employment) a resources section (including
emergency phone numbers - nice idea - city council meetings and agenda,
maps, and recent ordinances) and a link to local weather forecast.

There are only four links on the left menu, which are repeated at the top
part of subsequent pages. An interesting way to do a menu but it seems to
work, I think mostly because there are only four links.

The City Government page starts with a message from the Mayor and contains
city contacts, meeting minutes (2002) and meeting agenda (there's also a
2003 city meeting calendar.) There's a place for FAQs and city ordinances,
but they're not online yet. The City Services page includes several
mouseover menus and includes forms, police and emergency services,
employment, and planning and building codes. The Community page offers a
very brief link list, a city map (PDF), and a PDF of important phone
numbers (it says it's for new citizens but it really looks like anybody
could get use out of it.) And of course, the Home link goes back to the
home page.

LA -- Louisiana -- Baton Rouge
http://www.ci.baton-rouge.la.us/
This site was hardly readable in Opera 6.x, but looks okay in Internet
Explorer. I normally don't think of public ice skating when I think of
Louisiana, but it's listed under the public news items on the right of the
screen, along with
other tidbits including firefighting jobs and a link to the Baton Rouge
Coroner.

On the left side of the page are two dropdown menus and a services menu.
The first dropdown menu provides information and links from Adjudicated
Properties to the The Baton Rouge Workforce Investment Board. The second
menu, departments, offers links from the airport to traffic engineering.

The menus underneath the dropdown menu provides a grab bag of links,
including traffic bulletins, the library, employment, and a brief list of
Baton Rouge links.

The right side of the page has featured items. Ice skating in Boston I can
relate to. Boston has its own store! You can also check out the event
listings for the 2002 holiday season. On the left side of the page are
three tiny, almost unnoticeable links; information for residences,
visitors, and businesses.

Across the top of the page is another menu. The mayor page provides a lot
of information about the city's mayor, including speeches, biography, and
press releases. The city council page has minutes for the 2002 meetings
and other
city council information. The calendar is the most extensive one I've seen
this far and provides information on events through June 2003! The
e-services page is listed by transaction type and includes health
inspection information, a search of historic headstones, and a form for
reporting graffiti problems. Finally, the contact page provides
information on contacting many departments and people in Boston's
government. Well done, Boston, even if I can't decide what those colors
are.